4/7/08-4/14/08|Weekly Bird Flu Thread:New bird flu outbreak in South Korea

JPD

Inactive
New bird flu outbreak in South Korea

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/1320238/1691861

Apr 7, 2008 9:37 PM

South Korea confirmed a new outbreak of bird flu at a duck farm in the south-west and said it was investigating two other possible cases days after reporting an outbreak at a nearby chicken farm.

Quarantine workers had started culling 6,500 ducks at the Jeongeup farm, where 6,000 poultry have died since last week, and had destroyed thousands of birds which had already been sent elsewhere, the Farm Ministry said.

They were also investigating two nearby duck farms where hundreds of birds had died over the weekend.

The area is only 27km from the chicken farm in Gimje, about 215km south of Seoul, which reported the country's first outbreak of H5N1 in 13 months.

The farm ministry banned distribution of 3.6 million birds within a 10km radius of the Gimje site and the destruction of eggs distributed from the area.

South Korea had seven outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu between November 2006 and March 2007 and has spent 58 billion won ($NZ74.3 million) on quarantine measures.

Bird flu has killed 238 people globally since 2003, according to the World Health Organisation.

The big concern is that it could mutate into a disease that easily passes from one person to another, triggering a deadly global pandemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird-flu outbreak reported from another Indian state

http://news.monstersandcritics.com/...u_outbreak_reported_from_another_Indian_state

New Delhi - Indian authorities on Monday confirmed a new outbreak of avian influenza in the north-eastern state of Tripura, a news report said.

Samples of dead fowl sent to a government laboratory in the central Indian city of Bhopal had tested positive for the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus, the PTI news agency reported quoting official sources.

At least 5,000 fowl had died in a village in the eastern Dhalai district of the state over the past one week, prompting the Tripura government to send the samples to the laboratory.

Health agencies in Tripura were expected to launch culling operations later on Monday.

The report said bird flu had spread from the neighbouring state of West Bengal where authorities were already culling fowl in a third affected district.

Both Tripura and West Bengal border Bangladesh, from where authorities suspect the virus had originally spread.

'The virus could have been transmitted through smuggling of poultry birds from bordering Bangladesh, which is hit by avian flu again,' West Bengal Animal Resource Minister Anisur Rahman told reporters.

An earlier outbreak of bird flu in West Bengal, confirmed on January 15, had been described as the worst outbreak in India so far by the World Health Organization.

A total of 14 of the 19 districts in the state, including Murshidabad, had been affected.

The authorities culled over 4 million birds in an effort to contain the disease which spreads rapidly. Officials announced in early February that the disease had been contained and subsequently lifted a ban on sale and consumption of poultry.

According to the federal Health Ministry no cases of human infection had been reported in the current outbreak and the state government had adequate stock of Oseltamivir and personal protective equipment to tackle the disease.

India has so far seen three major outbreaks of bird flu, but has not yet reported any cases of human infection.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu center opened to protect S Asia

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-04/07/content_7935050.htm

PHNOM PENH, April 7 (Xinhua) -- The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has opened a regional center in Thailand stocked with supplies to combat a potential outbreak of avian influenza (AI) in Southeast Asia, according to a press release issued here on Monday.

Larger than a soccer field, the Bangkok warehouse contains enough personal protective equipment (PPE), decontamination kits and laboratory equipment to serve tens of thousands of people throughout Southeast Asia, said the press release from the USAID mission in Cambodia.

"Stockpiles of PPE are one critical component of the U.S. government's emergency pandemic preparedness in order to provide protection to first-responders to disease outbreak," said Erin Soto, USAID/Cambodia Mission Director.

"With the establishment of this regional distribution center in Thailand, the USAID is in a position to rapidly re-supply the MAFFin the advent of an AI outbreak," he added.

The first of three regional centers being planned worldwide, the depot will ensure a rapid response to any outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 virus, the release said, adding that the USAID spent nearly 550,000 U.S. dollars stocking the Bangkok depot.

In May 2007, USAID/Cambodia donated 4,500 PPE kits and 50 decontamination kits to Cambodia's Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (MAFF).

Bird flu remains a major threat throughout the region with the risk that the virus might mutate and attack humans. Worldwide, the H5N1 virus has been confirmed in more than 330 people, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which estimates that flu pandemics routinely occur about every 35 years.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Hits Pakistan, Kills Family Members

http://www.shortnews.com/start.cfm?id=69826

Pakistan has fallen victim to human-to-human bird flu transmission for the first time, with various members of the one family being killed by the virus late last year. The incident, and the way the flu was transmitted, was confirmed by the WHO.

The region was hit by the avian flu virus last year, and officials took drastic measures to control the spread of the virus, culling thousands of birds. The father in the family in question was a poultry worker who seems to have passed on the virus.

While he survived, three of his brothers fell victim for the disease. He was the only person in the family to have been in contact with birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
Egypt Reports 21st Bird Flu Related Death

http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7010559328

Joseph Mayton - AHN Middle East Correspondent

Cairo, Egypt (AHN) - The Egyptian government reported the country's 21st death from the deadly H5N1 strain of avian flu on Saturday. The man died in the northern Delta region, the North African nation's health ministry said.

Mohamed Idris, from Baheira, had been at a hospital in Egypt's second largest city Alexandria with reported respiratory problems and a high fever. He did not respond to the anti-viral drug Tamiflu, Deputy Minister Nasr Al Sayed told the official government news agency MENA.

He becomes Egypt's 48th case of a human infection from bird flu. The virus has devastated poultry populations worldwide.

Egypt is the worst hit nation outside East Asia, where the virus originated, due to its proximity to the convergence of three continents and the migration path for many birds.

The majority of those infected in Egypt have not followed the health ministry's regulations not to raise poultry in homes
 

JPD

Inactive
Official: WHO aid to China tops $190 mln

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-04/07/content_7935278.htm

BEIJING, April 7 (Xinhua) -- The World Health Organization (WHO) had provided China with 190 million U.S. dollars worth of aid by the end of 2007, China's vice health minister Ma Xiaowei said Monday.

Ma told a World Health Day gathering in Beijing that the aid was mainly for public health, such as epidemic treatment and prevention and tobacco control.

According to Ma, 71 Chinese institutions had been appointed as cooperation centers with the world health body by the end of 2007.

China had a long history of cooperation with the WHO, especially after the country began the reform and opening up in 1978, the official said.

With the WHO aid, China sent more than 2,000 medical experts to study abroad, meanwhile the WHO helped send thousands of experts to China for technical support, especially in the combat against SARS (Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome) and bird flu in recent years, Ma said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Possible third flu outbreak, in S. Korea

http://www.chinapost.com.tw/asia/korea/2008/04/07/150709/Possible-third.htm

SEOUL -- South Korea is investigating its third possible bird flu outbreak in less than a week, with 280,000 chickens and ducks being culled to contain the virus, officials said Sunday.

The culling went ahead following two outbreaks at poultry farms in the country's southwest last week and as it was announced that another site had been placed under quarantine.

South Korea Saturday confirmed a second bird flu case at a duck farm in Jeongeup, about 250 kilometers (156 miles) southwest of Seoul, where half of some 12,000 birds had died in the past week, prompting a slaughter.

"Officials culled and buried the remaining 6,140 ducks overnight at the affected farm in Jeongeup," Kim Hong-Chun, an official handling bird flu cases at the North Cheolla Province government, told AFP.

"They also completed culling and burying 270,614 chickens at a farm in Gimje, which had reported this year's first outbreak."

The outbreaks in Jeongeup and Gimje, 27 kilometers apart, have raised fears that bird flu may be spreading to other areas in North Cheolla Province, home to South Korea's poultry industry.

Movements of poultry being raised within a 10-kilometer radius of the affected farms are restricted.

Quarantine authorities said Sunday a duck farm in Sunchang, some 30 kilometers away from Jeongeup, has reported daily deaths of 40 to 50 birds since 10 days ago. The farm was under quarantine, as officials were trying to determine if the deaths were caused by bird flu or something else. The test results are due around Wednesday, they said.

Authorities here are also trying to determine whether the latest outbreaks relate to a virulent H5NI strain of bird flu.

South Korea reported seven cases of infection with the deadly H5N1 virus between November 2006 and March last year, with poultry exports to Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan and elsewhere temporarily suspended.

But last June the World Organization for Animal Health classified South Korea as free from the disease.

The virulent H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed more than 230 people worldwide since late 2003. No South Koreans have contracted the disease.
 

JPD

Inactive
Likely H5N1 Spread to Fourth South Korean Farm

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04070801/H5N1_Korea_Farms_4.html

Recombinomics Commentary 07:21
April 7, 2008

The Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said that it has received a report from a chicken farm in Gobu, North Jeolla Province that around 700 chickens have died recently.

The farm, located just 3 kilometers away from a duck farm in Jeongeup -- where an outbreak was reported late last week -- has been rearing a total of 18,000 chickens, it added. The ministry said that it is currently investigating whether the massive death of chickens is related to bird flu.

The above comments describe the likely spread of H5N1 to a fourth farm in South Korea (see satellite map). H5N1 has been confirmed at the chicken farm in Kimje, as described in the OIE report. It has also been confirmed at the duck farm in Jeongeup, which is 3 km from the chicken farm described above. H5N1 is also suspect at a duck farm in Sunchang, where the mortality rate is lower than the first duck farm, but ducks are usually resistant to H5N1, so the death of 500 ducks on a farm of 10,000 would not exclude H5N1.

The death of ducks on two farms suggests the H5N1 is the Uvs Lake version of the Qinghai strain, which was detected in the same area in late 2006. Similarly, this same area reported H5N1 infections in late 2003. That H5N1 was a precursor for the Qinghai strain.

Thus, the outbreaks in late 2003, late 2006, and the current outbreak were all reported in the same region, which lies on a migratory bird flyway that connects South Korea to Mongolia. It is likely that the current outbreak will also be linked to migratory birds returning to Mongolia and carrying the latest version of the Uvs Lake strain of H5N1.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu: father infected by dying son

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/health/article3701724.ece

Alarm about a flu pandemic has been restarted by clear evidence that bird flu, which is rife in the Far East, can be transmitted person to person.

This could be one of the first steps in the evolution of the H5N1 strain of avian flu into a deadly pandemic strain that could infect hundreds of millions of people.

The new evidence involves a 52-year-old man who caught the disease from his 24-year-old son, who himself seems to have picked it up at a poultry market. The son died, while his father narrowly survived.

A team of doctors led by Yu Wang, of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention in Beijing, report in The Lancet online that the two cases of avian flu were detected in the family from Nanjing, in Jiangsu Province, in December last year.

The man of 24, a salesman, developed fever, chills, headache, a sore throat and a cough. He was treated with antibiotics but his condition worsened and he was admitted to hospital, where he died five days later.

Just before he died, tests showed that he was infected by H5N1 avian flu virus. His father, a retired engineer, lived six miles away. When his son fell ill he went to see him and helped to look after him in hospital for two days.

The father fell ill a week later but survived after being treated with antiviral drugs and blood plasma from a woman who had been deliberately infected with inactive H5N1 in a clinical trial. He spent 22 days in hospital.

Samples of H5N1 virus taken from the father and son were genetically identical, save for one small change. Flu virus mutates rapidly, so the fact that these two samples were so nearly identical is strong evidence of direct infection from son to father.

Jeremy Farrar and colleagues from the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Vietnam said in The Lancet: “If we continue to experience widespread, uncontrolled outbreaks of H5N1 in poultry, the appearance of strains well-adapted to human beings might be just a matter of time.”

A further 100 close contacts of the father and son were identified and followed up for ten days. Eight had been exposed to both men, but none developed H5N1 flu. The team concluded that the son passed the infection to his father, probably at the hospital. The son had gone to the poultry market six days before falling ill.

It is possible that his father caught the disease independently, when he visited another market to buy vegetables. There were poultry being slaughtered there, but the father said that he did not go anywhere near them.

So the odds are strongly that he caught avian flu from his son. Other cases of suspected person-to-person transmission have also been between blood relations, suggesting that there may be a genetic susceptibility to H5N1 infection, the authors said.

Wendy Barclay, Chair in Influenza Virology at Imperial College London, said: “Although it is possible that the father did catch H5N1 influenza from his son, there is no virological evidence to support the idea that this strain of H5N1 virus has acquired mutations that allow it to pass readily from one person to another.”
 

JPD

Inactive
China confirms bird flu outbreak

http://www.hindu.com/2008/04/08/stories/2008040854621400.htm

BEIJING: China’s Ministry of Agriculture on Monday confirmed an outbreak of bird flu at a farm in a Tibet Autonomous Region village. The testing of 268 dead chickens at a farm at Zhuba village of Qamdo County in recent days revealed that the H5N1 bird flu killed them, the National Bird Flu Reference Laboratory said.

On Friday, Tibet’s major animal disease prevention and control headquarter office reported the epidemic to the Ministry. Along with the local government, the Ministry immediately started emergency plans. The disease has been brought under control, the ministry said.

The latest outbreak was the sixth among poultry this year. On Thursday, the Ministry lifted a bird flu quarantine in the southern city of Guangzhou after no new cases were reported for 21 days. — Xinhua
 

JPD

Inactive
19-year-old Egyptian dies of avian flu

http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/cidrap/content/influenza/avianflu/news/apr0708egypt.html

Apr 7, 2008 (CIDRAP News) – A 19-year-old Egyptian man died of H5N1 avian influenza Apr 5, raising the country's H5N1 toll to 48 cases with 21 deaths, according to news services.

The man was from the Nile Delta province of Beheira and had been exposed to infected poultry at home, said reports by Agence France-Presse (AFP) and Bloomberg News.

He was hospitalized in Alexandria on Apr 3 after complaining of a high fever and shortness of breath, a health ministry official told the MENA news agency, according to AFP. Another official told Bloomberg that the man was treated with oseltamivir (Tamiflu), but it was too late to save him.

Egypt has had four previous human H5N1 cases this year, one of them fatal, according to the World Health Organization (WHO). The country has had more cases than any other non-Asian nation and the third most overall after Indonesia and Vietnam.

Egypt's location on major bird migration routes and its many households with backyard poultry flocks have contributed to the high number of cases there, the AFP story noted. Most of those infected in Egypt have been women and children, who take care of the backyard poultry in most cases, the story said.

Of the four previous cases in Egypt so far this year, three of the patients were children and one was a 25-year-old woman, WHO reports show.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu, China confirms human to human transmission

http://www.asianews.it/index.php?l=en&art=11955&size=A

The case dates back to December: father and son both contracted the H5N1 virus. The young man did not survive. It is nit the first case, but the widely feared mutation of the virus has been excluded.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) – Chinese health authorities today confirmed a case of human to human contact of Bird Flu, dating back to last December in Jiangsu province. The case involved a 52 year old farther and his 24 year old son who contacted the H5N1 virus within a week of each other. The young man died, but his farther has survived thanks to treatment with anti-viral drugs and a trial vaccine. At the time the World Health Organisation (WHO) had only said that it “did not exclude” the possibility of human to human contact. Today it has been confirmed.

A visit to a poultry market proved fatal for the young man. The father, it seems, did not come into direct contact with infected fowl, the only “risk of exposure” was contact with his son. The virus detected in the blood samples of the close relatives was practically identical, from a genetic point of view.

The spreading of the H5N1 virus between humans has already happened in dozens of countries including Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam and Pakistan. Mostly, the source of the contagion was found in the blood samples of the family member who had been in close contact with infected fowl,. Moreover, in these cases the virus failed to endemically spread throughout the community. However scientists now fear that the virus is capable of mutating to become pandemic.

The so-called Bird Flu virus is spread by migratory birds and passes to humans through contact with infected farmed fowl. Breeding grounds for this virus periodically break out in South East Asia, which has led to the suppression of millions upon millions of animals. According to experts in the field there is dire need for change in poultry farming methods, particularly in Asian nations where these animals live in close contact with humans, often in backyards.

Since 2003, with a series of successive alarms from South Korea to Vietnam, the dangerous nature of the H5N1 virus has increased now resulting in a 100% death rate for infected birds. Transmission to humans first came to light in 2004. Since then 378 certified cases of virus have been confirmed in humans, with 238 deaths throughout the world.
 

JPD

Inactive
Mass cull begins in bird-flu hit Tripura

http://www.thaindian.com/newsportal/health/mass-cull-begins-in-bird-flu-hit-tripura_10035650.html

April 8th, 2008

Agartala, April 8 (IANS) Authorities in Tripura Tuesday began a massive cull to slaughter some 25,000 poultry after laboratory tests confirmed that birds in the area have been affected by avian influenza, officials said. “The culling operations would take at least a week,” said Aghore Debbarma, agriculture and animal resource development (ARDD) minister.

More than 3,000 chickens, ducks, crows and other birds had died in the past two weeks prompting authorities to go for laboratory tests, which confirmed the presence of the deadly H5N1 strain of the avian influenza virus.

The culls are being carried out at Mohanpur and Malaya villages, 150 km north of here. The area is located along the border with Bangladesh.

“Some 100 veterinary officials are engaged in the culling drive spread over nine villages in Dhalai district,” the minister said.

To prevent spread of the contiguous disease, movement of vehicles to and from these villages has been restricted.

The state forest department has also asked its officials to keep a watch on Tripura’s 10 big water bodies where migratory birds from India and abroad are currently breeding.

The state government has banned the sale and consumption of poultry and poultry products in the affected and adjoining villages of Dhalai district.

“In Bangladesh, altogether 19 districts were affected by bird flu and it would not be wrong to say that the virus may have come to India’s adjoining areas of Kamalpur from Maulvi Bazar (in Bangladesh), which is close to the border town,” the minister said.

“We have asked the BSF (Border Security Force) to maintain a strict vigil along the Indo-Bangladesh border to prevent illegal trade of poultry and poultry products from Bangladesh,” he added.

Fifteen of Tripura’s 17 sub-divisions fall along the 856 km international border with Bangladesh.
 

JPD

Inactive
Faster Test Detects Fake Tamiflu Drugs

http://www.hon.ch/News/HSN/613886.html

With counterfeiters looking to cash in on fears, Georgia team develops a 1-minute screen

By Kevin McKeever

MONDAY, April 7 (HealthDay News) -- A fast method to detect fake Tamiflu, the mainstay medication for preventing and treating bird flu, has been developed to stop counterfeiters trying to make money off the demand for antivirals that fight the deadly disease.

Chemists in Georgia are scheduled to describe how Desorption Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry (DESI-MS) can determine the authenticity of large batches of Tamiflu up to 20 times faster than conventional methods during a presentation Monday at the American Chemical Society meeting in New Orleans.

"It's a one-step process that doesn't require any extensive sample preparation," presenter Dr. Facundo M. Fernandez, of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, said in a prepared statement.

DESI-MS yields sample results in less than one minute. The "gold standard" for analysis uses high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), a powerful method that can take up to an hour, he said.

"This method is really targeted at screening large amounts of products" that might be expected during a pandemic of influenza, Fernandez added. "In case of a crisis, you wouldn't be able to wait an hour per sample. You'd want to screen hundreds of samples per day," he said.

When fears of a global epidemic of avian influenza first emerged in 2005, worried consumers in the United States and other countries began to horde Tamiflu, seeking prescriptions from physicians and purchasing the medication from online pharmacies.

In 2007, 86 confirmed human cases of bird flu occurred in the world, according to the World Health Organization, with 59 cases resulting in death.

Tamiflu's demand and high cost -- $6.50 a pill -- have made it a preferred target for fakes, Fernandez noted, and counterfeits have already surfaced in Chicago, San Francisco and other areas.

"The penalties for counterfeiting pharmaceuticals are much lower than for trafficking illegal drugs like cocaine," Fernandez said. "Many of the operations focused on making illegal drugs are shifting to counterfeiting drugs because of the low penalties and high profits."

Fernandez tested DESI-MS's effectiveness by collecting different Tamiflu samples from online pharmacies and found all of them to contain the active ingredient. However, he warned that customers who purchase online should use extra caution.

Although some online pharmacies are certified, Fernandez said people usually look for low prices instead. "What you get online can be pretty much anything," he said. "It's very easy for the counterfeiter to bypass the system that's in place to protect the consumer. And it's very easy for the consumer to get medications."
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
New bird flu outbreak in South Korea

Apr 7, 2008 9:37 PM

South Korea confirmed a new outbreak of bird flu at a duck farm in the south-west and said it was investigating two other possible cases days after reporting an outbreak at a nearby chicken farm.

Quarantine workers had started culling 6,500 ducks at the Jeongeup farm, where 6,000 poultry have died since last week, and had destroyed thousands of birds which had already been sent elsewhere, the Farm Ministry said.

They were also investigating two nearby duck farms where hundreds of birds had died over the weekend.

The area is only 27km from the chicken farm in Gimje, about 215km south of Seoul, which reported the country's first outbreak of H5N1 in 13 months.


The farm ministry banned distribution of 3.6 million birds within a 10km radius of the Gimje site and the destruction of eggs distributed from the area.

South Korea had seven outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain of bird flu between November 2006 and March 2007 and has spent 58 billion won ($NZ74.3 million) on quarantine measures

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/page/536641/1691861
 

JPD

Inactive
Chinese open up on bird flu

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,23509804-23289,00.html

Leigh Dayton | April 09, 2008

IN a remarkable reversal of policy, Chinese scientists have for the first time reported openly about a case of person-to-person transmission of bird flu.

The scientists collaborated with researchers at the US Centres for Disease Control in Atlanta to confirm the case of a 52-year-old man who contracted bird flu from his 24-year-old son who died. The man survived.

The group - led by Yu Wang, of the Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention in Beijing - reported yesterday in The Lancet that there was no evidence the deadly HVN1 virus had evolved to spread easily between people.

Dominic Dwyer, a medical virologist with the Institute for Clinical Pathology and Medical Research at Westmead Hospital in Sydney, welcomed the findings.

"Fortunately, there's still no (easy) human-to-human transmission," Professor Dwyer said. He noted that, to date, "less than half a dozen" people had died from H5N1 spread by a person, not a bird.

Virologist William Rawlinson, with Sydney's Prince of Wales hospital, said the genetic information provided would help diagnosis.
 

JPD

Inactive
Gov't Confirms 4th Outbreak of Bird Flu

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/04/117_22193.html

South Korean quarantine authorities said Wednesday they have confirmed the fourth outbreak of bird flu in the the country this year.

The Ministry for Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries said the "H5 type" of avian influenza was found at a duck farm in the Youngwon-myeon area of the city of Jeongeup. The city in North Jeolla Province is located 271 kilometers south of Seoul.

"More detailed tests have to be run, but judging by the number of sudden deaths, experts are certain the ducks died from the virulent strain," said a government official.

Quarantine authorities have already confirmed that the first reported outbreak at a chicken farm in Gimje, 27 kilometers north of Jeongeup, was caused by the highly contagiously H5N1 strain that has previously affected humans.

It also said Monday that bird flu was confirmed at another duck farm in Youngwon-myeon and at a poultry farm in nearby Gobu-myeon.

The areas of the two outbreaks in Youngwon are only 2.7 kilometers apart. The ministry added the second farm hit by bird flu in Youngwon is about 3 kilometers from the Gobu duck farm.

"As a precautionary measure, all of the poultry at the nine poultry farms located within 3 kilometers of the first outbreaks in Youngwon and Gobu have been culled and buried," said a local official. A total of 150,000 were culled, and quarantine officials are ready to cull more if necessary.

Under standing operational procedures, all movement of birds, people and vehicles are strictly controlled within a 10 kilometer radius of all outbreaks. The quarantine is usually maintained for three weeks, the maximum incubation period for bird flu.

Authorities are currently conducting tests taken on samples from 10 other poultry farms in North Jeolla Province to see if they have been affected by avian influenza.

The ministry, meanwhile, said it has culled a total of 524,00 birds so far and destroyed 23.3 million eggs. The losses are expected to total 7.5 billion won ($7.6 million).

South Korea has been hit twice before by the disease, once in the winter of 2003-2004 and once in 2006-2007, resulting in considerable loss of property and a sudden drop in demand for poultry.
 

JPD

Inactive
India

Avian flu spreads to north-eastern states

http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/3035

With the confirmation of avian-influenza in Tripura, the department of animal husbandry has begun culling chickens in bird flu hit areas of the state. The Centre has also sent a team of experts to other north-eastern regions like Assam and Meghalaya to take stock of the ground situation.

The State Animal Resources Development Department on Monday had notified outbreak of avian influenza in poultry in the Village: Mohanpur (Block Salema), district Dhalai of Tripura.

The Central Rapid Response Team has been sent to the state with 500 Personal Protective Equipments, 200 N-95 masks, 5000 capsules of Tami flu and 2 ventilators to prevent further spread of the H5N1 avian flu virus.

As per reports the culling operations in Dhalai district of Tripura began from Tuesday will continue for the next couple of days with set target of killing over 25,000 birds. Mohanpur and seven village panchayat areas of Kamalpur sub-division of the district are on the surveillance line where about 3,000 chickens died of influenza during the past fortnight.

Earlier on April 04, the Department of Animal Husbandry, Dairying and Fisheries has informed outbreak of H5N1 virus in Nadia and Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal following which culling operation was being carried out with active house-to-house surveillance.

Following the outbreak of bird flu in West Bengal in January this year, the avian fear has hit the news from early this year as the government particularly West Bengal has so far been failed to contain the spread to other parts.

In January, in one of the worst outbreak of bird flu the H5N1 virus affected almost 13 of the 19 districts of West Bengal and nearly 4 million birds were culled by the authorities.

Despite repeated warning from World Health Organisation (WHO) and UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), India has been a continuous hit zone in the absence of proper mechanism to restrain this influenza pandemic.

According to WHO report, since the year 2003 bird flu has killed 239 people in 14 countries out of the 379 human affected cases confirmed in the laboratory globally. However, India is not included in the list of countries with human death cases, but such continuous outbreak in a particular region can lead to any extent.
 

JPD

Inactive
Vietnam

Bird flu reported in Tien Giang

http://www.nhandan.com.vn/english/life/090408/life_b.htm

Nhan Dan - Bird flu was reported to have occurred in Tien Giang province, said the Veterinary Department in Hanoi on April 8 at a meeting of the National Steering Board on Avian Influenza.

The department said that new bird flu outbreaks were reported in Tan Phuoc district, Tien Giang province.

Dead ducks of a 1,500 duck flock of a family in Phuoc Lap commune, Tan Phuoc district, have been found by authorised agencies since April 4.

Samples were tested positive for H5N1 virus.

Meanwhile, Nui Thanh and Tien Phuoc districts in Quang Nam province are reported to have the disease.

Tien Giang and Quang Nam provinces have yet to be free from bird flu for 21 days.

The National Steering Board on Avian Influenza warned of a high risk of bird flu outbreaks in localities, especially those in Mekong delta.
 

JPD

Inactive
S. Korea reports ninth confirmed bird flu outbreak

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest+News/Asia/STIStory_225780.html

SEOUL - SOUTH Korea on Thursday confirmed its ninth bird flu outbreak this month despite the culling of hundreds of thousands of poultry and intensive quarantine efforts.

The agriculture ministry said in a statement the country had another 13 suspected cases in which test results were awaited.

Ministry officials said all nine confirmed cases involved H5 bird flu and two of them involved the deadly H5N1 strain.

Health authorities have culled hundreds of thousands of birds in and around infected poultry farms in the southern Jeolla provinces, a hub of the country's livestock industry.

They have also imposed restrictions on the movement of birds, people and vehicles in the region, which reported this year's first outbreak last week.

The ninth confirmed case was at a chicken farm in Gimje, 260km south of Seoul.

South Korea reported seven cases of H5N1 infection between November 2006 and March last year, resulting in the temporary suspension of poultry exports to Japan, Hong Kong, Taiwan and elsewhere.

But last June the World Organisation for Animal Health classified the country as free from the disease.

The H5N1 strain has killed more than 230 people worldwide since late 2003. No South Koreans have contracted the disease. -- AFP
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu: Red alert in Tripura

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Bird_flu_Red_alert_in_Tripura/rssarticleshow/2940814.cms

AGARTALA: The Tripura government has sounded a red alert across the state following reports of deaths of birds in two other districts besides the avian-flu hit Dhalai where culling operations continued for the third day on Thursday.

Import of poultry from outside, including neighbouring Bangladesh, has been prohibited, official sources said.

About 200 poultry and birds died in Neharnagar of Belonia sub-division of South Tripura district during the past one week, while a few crows have died at Katlamara area of Sadar sub-division of West Tripura district in the past three days.

Veterinary doctors on Wednesday collected samples from dead birds which would be sent to the High Security Animal Disease Laboratory in Bhopal on Thursday.

Preliminary examinations conducted by state veterinary doctors could not ascertain whether the birds were affected by bird flu. Symptoms showed that the birds might have been infected by pabrine or ranikhet disease, the sources said.

A high level meeting chaired by Commissioner of State for Animal Resource Development, V Venkateswarlu, on Wednesday decided that veterinary doctors would camp in Khowai, Sadar and Sonamura sub-divisions of west Tripura district and in Belonia sub-division of south Tripura district from Thursday.

Altogether 25,000 birds have been culled in eight bird flu affected gaon panchayet areas of Kamalpur subdivision of Dhalai district since April 8 when the operation started.

A team of doctors from the National Institute of Communicable Diseases (NICD) have examined 1500 people in the bird flu affected areas of the district since Tuesday but no infection was detected, the sources said.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu virus may have got entrenched in India: UN

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...enched_in_India_UN/rssarticleshow/2939607.cms

NEW DELHI: In its gravest warning to India since bird flu first broke out in Maharashtra in 2006, the United Nations has said that the highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza virus may have got entrenched in the Indo-Gangetic plains of India and Bangladesh.

While West Bengal is grappling with the H5N1 virus that has re-infected poultry in the four districts of Nadia, Malda, Murshidabad and Jalpaiguri, 47 of Bangladesh's 64 districts are also reeling under a similar outbreak.
Speaking to TOI from New York, UN’s influenza coordinator Dr David Nabarro said the new outbreaks in India and the continuous circulation of the virus in Bangladesh had started to worry him. He said that with high chances of the virus getting entrenched in the Gangetic plains of West Bengal, the fear of a possible human pandemic remained high.

According to him, an entrenched virus would mean a longer time to stamp it out, higher risk of continuous re-infections and a greater cost — both financial and human — for the infected country. Entrenched viruses not only put the host country, but also neighbouring or distant nations at permanent risk of incursion.

"In light of the continuous re-infections in West Bengal and new outbreak in Tripura, there is a serious possibility that the virus is becoming entrenched in the Gangetic delta. I am seriously concerned about it. This is not something India should take lightly," Nabarro said.

He said entrenched viruses would be a threat to the entire country and would cause sporadic outbreaks at regular intervals. It would multiply freely among poultry, keeping alive the risk of a human pandemic.

Reacting to Dr Nabarro’s concerns, animal husbandry secretary Pradeep Kumar said, "We have drawn Bengal's attention to slack sanitisation operations and have told the government to immediately take remedial measures. The state has not carried out operations according to the action plan."

Dr Nabarro said control and containment operations in West Bengal are a perfect example of what can happen when the virus infects densely populated regions where people are dependent on their livestock for nourishment and earnings. "I sympathise with the state government. Culling over four million birds is a massive operation. It’s very difficult to take poultry from poor people who depend on it to live. It’s then much harder to control the outbreak and stamp out the virus," he said.

Meanwhile, India on Wednesday asked director general of FAO, Dr Jacques Diouf, to pressurise Bangladesh into stepping up control and containment operations. In Tripura, which announced an outbreak on Monday, over 19,000 poultry have been culled in the past two days by 26 rapid response teams even as fresh bird deaths in Rajnagar and Bishalgarh were reported.
 

JPD

Inactive
Impact of closing schools during pandemic less than projected: study

http://www.mytelus.com/ncp_news/article.en.do?pn=canada&articleID=2901661

Helen Branswell, Medical Reporter, THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO - Closing schools during a flu pandemic might slow spread of the disease but probably won't have as big an impact on overall cases as some pandemic planners hope, a new study suggests.

British and French researchers reported that one in seven cases of pandemic flu might be averted if schools are closed and parents ensure that dismissed children don't simply congregate elsewhere, such as in formal or informal daycares or at the mall.

Their projections, generated by mathematical models, were published Thursday in the journal Nature.

Earlier modelling studies have predicted closing schools could dramatically lower the number of cases in a pandemic. This new work suggests those studies may have been overly optimistic.

"I think our predicted impact is quite limited, but not so limited that school closures should not be considered as an option," said senior author Neil Ferguson of the department of infectious diseases epidemiology of London's Imperial College.

"I mean, we're in the regime of 'It may be worthwhile, but the costs need to be borne in mind."'

Those costs are not trivial.

Children who are not in school need to be cared for. If parents need to stay home, that knocks healthy people out of an already weakened workforce. And not all parents can afford to stay home from work. Likewise, in some places children who don't have access to a school meal program will go hungry if other arrangements are not made.

Still, closing schools is one of the so-called non-pharmaceutical interventions or social distancing measures that pandemic planners have firmly in mind as they search for ways to blunt the blow of the next pandemic.

A key goal of this type of planning is to find ways to slow spread of disease so that health-care systems don't get swamped by a tidal wave of sick patients. Planners talk of "flattening the peak" - essentially spreading out cases so that hospitals can continue to function and more people remain healthy until vaccine becomes available several months into the pandemic.

Ferguson said his group's work suggests school closings could help achieve this goal.

"The one thing it might do by slowing down the epidemic somewhat - smearing it out - is reduce peak demand on health-care systems quite substantially."

The notion is based on the fact that children play a key role in the spread of seasonal flu. Whether that will be true in a flu pandemic remains to be seen.

In trying to estimate what kind of impact closing schools might have, Ferguson and his co-authors drew on data from France, where for more than 20 years a group of nearly 1,200 doctors have submitted daily reports on new cases of a variety of diseases, including influenza-like illnesses.

Using those data, the group was able to study what happened to rates of new infections when French schools break up for holidays and to use that as a basis on which to estimate what might happen in a pandemic.

The calculations suggest infection rates in children would drop by between 20 and 25 per cent, Ferguson said. But the modelling suggests the patterns of interactions of adults wouldn't change that much and the overall reduction in cases might be more in the order of 15 per cent.

That would mean that instead of an estimated 34 per cent of the population falling ill during a pandemic, only 28 per cent would be expected to get sick.

But all these figures are estimates, calculated using assumptions set by the modellers themselves. And not everyone is convinced academic projections will have much bearing on reality when a pandemic hits.

"I find these models to be of little help because I don't believe they're practical in the real world," said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota who worked for years as that state's chief epidemiologist.

"For example, I am convinced we will not even have a chance to shut down schools before they are shut down on their own. Parents will not send their kids to school ... long before the actual transmission begins."

Osterholm pointed to school closings in the U.S. last fall, sparked by anxiety over the death of a Virginia high-school student. The 17-year-old died from an infection with antibiotic-resistant Staph, or MRSA.

A spokesperson for the World Health Organization said the Geneva-based agency is looking at these questions as its scientists draft the next version of its pandemic preparedness guidelines for member countries.

But Dr. Nima Asgari-Jirhandeh, a medical officer with the WHO's Global Influenza Program, said conditions vary so much from country to country that it will be difficult to come up with a single piece of advice on something like whether to close schools.

"If you've got a country where you've got 90 per cent of children going to school and when they come home they're going to come and play in front of the computer, that's a very different epidemiology of the disease than in a country where you've got 20 per cent of children going to school and when they leave they go and either play together or go and work," Asgari-Jirhandeh said.

"So you have to balance that. If I'm going close the school, is it actually going to work? It's not going to be so black and white."
 

JPD

Inactive
More on H2H H5N1 Transmission Media Myth

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04090802/H5N1_H2H_Media_Myth_More.html

Recombinomics Commentary 14:26
April 9, 2008

The recent WHO update on the extended human to human to human (H2H2H) transmission in Pakistan, as well as the Lancet paper on H2H in China has focused media attention on H2H transmission, which has been the subject of a media myth for the past four years. This was due in part by efforts of various governments and WHO to minimize the number of examples, which is more than several dozen. A great deal of effort focuses on splitting hairs between a familial cluster due to a common source (poultry) and clusters due to H2H transmission. This distinction is not significant, since both signal a more efficient transmission, which is the key requirement for a catastrophic pandemic that could greatly exceed 1918.

Currently H5N1 can grow well and produce fatal infections in a wide range of mammalian host, including humans. In humans, the case fatality rate for WHO confirmed cases exceeds 60%, which if coupled to the transmission efficiency of seasonal flu, would generate 100’s of millions of fatalities.

The media, generally does not consider a gradual change in transmission efficiency, so the mention of H5N1 and H2H in the same sentence creates concerns. However, limited H2H has been clear since the current expansion, which began in late 2003, was reported. Most of the confirmed clusters have been limited by the lack of sample collection from the index case. Those clusters which involve family members with links to poultry have been excluded from the list of proven examples, so H2H examples are usually limited to a handful of examples, when in fact the number of clusters is closer to 50 and the vast majority of such clusters involve H2H.

In fact, most initial confirmed human cases in country belong to a cluster. These cluster countries include Cambodia, Indonesia, China, Turkey, Iraq, Azerbaijan, and Nigeria. In Turkey, the number of lab confirmed cases was 21 and almost all were in clusters, although only 12 were subsequently confirmed by WHO labs because of sample degradation. Similarly, about 50% of the 2005 cases in Indonesia were in clusters, as were approximately 1/3 of the cases in Vietnam in 2005. Moreover, the discounting of clusters, due to lack of sample collection of misdiagnosis, is still ongoing, as seen in recent clusters in Indonesia.

The media myth, concerning the frequency of such clusters, continues, leading many to assume that the recent clusters in Pakistan and China are usual. Moreover, lack of human cases in India and Bangladesh remain suspect, and the clusters in Indonesia remain unconfirmed, due in part to the absence of sample testing, as well as false negatives due to collection of samples after the start of Tamiflu treatment.

Thus, the frequent and size of clusters is grossly under-estimated, and readers of the popular press remain surprised by the recent discussions of H2H transmission. Moreover, H2H transmission in families is also couched in terms of a genetic predisposition, for which there is no real data. Currently, H5N1 transmission is inefficient and requires close contact, which is most common among family members. In larger clusters there are examples of contacts who are not blood relatives, including husband / wife, friends, and patient / nurse. Moreover H5N1 is largely a avian virus at this time, but has been isolated from a wide range of mammals including domestics and wild cats, dogs, stone martens, foxes, Civet cats, swine, and mice, so the likelihood of a significant human predisposition remains remote.

However, the continued passage of H5N1 through a wide variety of mammals, including humans, increases the likelihood of the acquisition of polymorphisms via recombination, leading to more efficient transmission to humans.
 

JPD

Inactive
States fall behind on buying flu drugs

http://www.usatoday.com/money/indus...08-04-09-flu-pandemic-antiviral-tamiflu_N.htm

By Julie Schmit, USA TODAY
State budget pressures are hampering the federal government's push to stockpile enough antiviral drugs to treat 25% of the U.S. population in a flu pandemic.

Two and a half years into the national stockpiling program, states and other entities have bought 71% of the 31 million courses of anti-virals the federal government targeted them to buy, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says. One course treats one person.

The federally negotiated and subsidized contracts for the anti-virals Tamiflu and Relenza expire in June but may be extended, says HHS spokesman Bill Hall.

Some states' officials say they can't afford to stockpile or don't think it's the best use of limited funds. Others have ordered extra drugs. "We are faced with a very tight budget … and we have a lot of public health issues," says Judi Spann, spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Health.

It has bought 66,000 antiviral courses, 3.7% of the 1.8 million goal set for it, HHS says.
FIND MORE STORIES IN: Colorado | Massachusetts | Middle East | Asia | Africa | Rhode Island | Human Services | GlaxoSmithKline | Bill Hall | Tamiflu | Roche | Trust for America | Relenza | Jeffrey Levi | Florida Department of Health | Ned Calonge

Since 2003, H5N1 bird flu has killed 239 of 379 infected people in Asia, the Middle East and Africa.

The bird flu virus doesn't pass easily human-to-human. Health officials are concerned that someday it will, and that a vaccine won't be available for months after a pandemic starts. Anti-virals — No. 1-selling Tamiflu from Roche and Relenza from GlaxoSmithKline — shorten the flu's duration.

Colorado has opted not to stockpile anti-virals. Chief medical officer Ned Calonge says cost was a factor. State officials also worried the drugs, which have to be taken within 48 hours of the onset of flu symptoms, may not be effective. Another concern was that anti-virals bought through the federal program couldn't be used for seasonal flus.

Some states are just beginning to stockpile, such as Rhode Island and Massachusetts.

Lousiana, meanwhile, has all of its 471,804 federally subsidized anti-virals in hand. It also bought 50,000 extra, ordered by two cities.

Disparities among states could lead to some populations being better protected than others, says Jeffrey Levi, executive director of Trust for America's Health, a non-profit health advocacy group.

"Seventy percent is not adequate when you have pockets of the country with no or little coverage," he says.

More state purchases are expected soon, Hall says.

The federal government also has stockpiled 44 million courses, mostly Tamiflu, to cover 15% of the population in the states, territories and other regions. Calonge says the federal stash for Colorado more than covers its high-risk people and essential workers. The federal stockpile also has 6 million additional courses to contain an outbreak.
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
Indonesia bans Navy medical research unit​

Kyodo News Agency
Posted : Thursday Apr 10, 2008

JAKARTA, Indonesia — The Indonesian government has banned the U.S. Naval Medical Research Unit No. 2, or NAMRU-2 — which is studying infectious diseases in Southeast Asia, including bird flu — from operating in the country, an evening newspaper said Thursday. The reason behind the ban was not immediately clear.

Sinar Harapan daily reported that a note on the ban, signed by Triono Soendoro, director of the Health Research and Development Agency of the Health Ministry, had been circulated among several ministries.

“It [NAMRU-2] has been banned to operate here. Sorry, but I can’t comment further,” the newspaper quoted Soendoro as saying.

Health Ministry spokesman Soemardi also refused to confirm the report.

“I haven’t received any information about that,” he told Kyodo News.

The ban follows the publication of a book by Health Minister Siti Rahil Fadilah Supari, in which she accused the World Health Organization and the U.S. government of trying to profit from the spread of bird flu. NAMRU-2 began investigating the disease after initial cases were identified in Indonesia in 2004.

In the book, “It’s Time for the World to Change,” Supari claimed WHO laboratories forward avian influenza specimens to western countries that make vaccines and then profit from their sale back to the affected countries.

As of Tuesday, bird flu had infected at least 379 people in 14 countries since its re-emergence in December 2003. According to WHO data, 239 of them have died.

Indonesia leads the table with 107 deaths, followed by Vietnam with 52 and Egypt with 21.

The other affected countries are Azerbaijan, Cambodia, China, Djibouti, Iraq, Laos, Myanmar, Nigeria, Pakistan, Thailand and Turkey.

The NAMRU-2 Detachment was established in Indonesia in 1970 and is one of the most advanced facilities of its kind in Southeast Asia. Its work was done in cooperation with and under the auspices of the Indonesian Health Research and Development Agency.

http://www.navytimes.com/news/2008/04/kyo_indonesia_041008/
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu in Primorsky in Southeastern Russia

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04110802/H5N1_Primorsky.html

Recombinomics Commentary 10:01
April 11, 2008

village of Primorsky Krai Vozdvizhenka recorded losses of poultry.

10 birds died, the remaining 42 were slaughtered and burned.

After inspections, experts Primorsky Rosselhoznadzora interregional veterinary laboratory reported that it is avian flu. Currently, the virus strain clarified.

The above comments describe a likely H5N1 in southeastern Russia (see satellite map). The outbreak is just north or North Korea and is likely related to the migration of wild birds, which is also true for South Korea.

Although low path H5 has been reported in this region previously, this would be the first report of high path H5N1 if it is confirmed.

This outbreak may signal unreported H5N1 in the region, which includes North Korea, northwest China, and Japan.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Spread in Southwest Korea

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04110801/H5N1_SW_Korea.html

Recombinomics Commentary 09:33
April 11, 2008

suspected outbreaks of avian influenza have been discovered in Naju, about 355 kilometers south of Seoul.

authorities found suspected cases in Yeongam, 25 kilometers south of Naju, earlier in the week


The first outbreaks occurred in areas about 100 kilometers north of Naju, with several confirmed and suspected cases in Gimje and Jeongeup.

The ministry said there are now 25 confirmed and suspected cases of bird flu, with officials scrambling to cull and bury birds to prevent further contamination.

"As a precautionary measure, all birds within a 10 kilometer radius of Gimje and Jeongeup farms are to be destroyed," a quarantine official said. He added similar steps are to be taken for ducks and chickens within 3 kilometers of Yeongam.

He said the decision will result in over 2.36 million birds being culled in these regions.

The above comments describe the spread of H5N1 in South Korea (see satellite map). These locations are in the same region as outbreaks in 2003/2004 and 2006/2007 and lie on a migratory bird flyway between South Korea and Mongolia. Sequences from the 2006/2007 outbreak were the Uvs Lake strain, which evolved over the summer of 2006 in Mongolia.

It is likely that the movement of migratory birds to to north is linked to the current outbreaks in South Korea, as well as the bird flu outbreak in Primorsky, Russia, just north of North Korea.

These outbreaks raise concerns of additional unreported outbreaks in North Korea and northeastern China.
 

JPD

Inactive
Culling in Tripura to be complete by Friday, say officials

http://www.rxpgnews.com/indianhealthcare/article_99482.shtml

More than 3,000 chickens, ducks, crows and other birds had died in the last two weeks in Dhalai district's Malaya and Mohanpur villages, adjoining Bangladesh. This prompted authorities to go in for laboratory tests, which confirmed the presence of the deadly virus.


Agartala, April 10 - The operations to slaughter 42,000 poultry birds in Tripura's bird-flu affected villages are expected to be completed by Friday, officials said here Thursday.


'After the union government notified Tripura as bird flu hit Monday, we have started mass culling of birds in the bordering villages of Dhalai district Tuesday, and till Wednesday 25,700 birds were culled,' said Ashish Roy Burman, director of the Animal Resource Development Department -.

'We would slaughter 16,000 more birds, mostly chickens, Thursday and Friday to complete the mass culling in 10 villages of Kamalpur sub-division, bordering Bangladesh,' Burman, who along with senior officials of state and union government, has been camping in the affected areas since Sunday, told IANS by phone.

There were reports of fresh deaths of birds in Belonia in south Tripura and Bishalgarh, Sonamura and Khowai in west Tripura in the past three days.

'Blood samples of the dead birds are being sent to the Bhopal-based High Security Animal Disease Laboratory for testing,' the official said.

Burman said a number of rapid response teams and surveillance group have fanned out in the villages along the 856 km-long border with Bangladesh to collect blood samples of dead birds.

The Central Rapid Response Team - from the union ministry of health and family welfare is assisting the state authorities in the culling operations.

The union ministry has supplied 500 personal protective equipments, 200 N-95 masks, 5,000 capsules of Tamiflu and two ventilators.

'Intense house-to-house surveillance in the bird flu affected villages has been continuing. The health teams have covered a population of over 2,500 and there is no suspect case of human avian influenza,' an official release here said.

Culling operations were intensified Thursday with 20 rapid response teams -, comprising 200 ARDD officials and associates, deployed in Dhalai district's bordering villages, 150 km north of capital Agartala.

A separate isolation ward has been created at the Bimal Sinha Memorial government hospital at Kamalpur in Dhalai district and the union health ministry has rushed three specialist doctors.

More than 3,000 chickens, ducks, crows and other birds had died in the last two weeks in Dhalai district's Malaya and Mohanpur villages, adjoining Bangladesh. This prompted authorities to go in for laboratory tests, which confirmed the presence of the deadly virus.

The Border Security Force - has been maintaining a strict vigil along the international border to prevent illegal trade of poultry and poultry products from the neighbouring country, whose 19 of the 64 districts have been affected by bird flu.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu case raises fears of undiagnosed infections

http://www.newscientist.com/channel...e-raises-fears-of-undiagnosed-infections.html

* 12 April 2008
A NEW case of human-to-human transmission doesn't prove that H5N1 bird flu is learning to spread among humans, but it reinforces fears that there could be many more undiagnosed human infections in China. It may also point to a potential cure.

Last November, a salesman hospitalised in Nanjing, China, with fever, diarrhoea and pneumonia was given antibiotics for suspected bacterial infection, but tested positive for H5N1 shortly before he died. The next day his father fell ill with a nearly identical virus, and was given plasma from a woman who had received an experimental whole-virus H5N1 vaccine. He recovered (The Lancet, DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(08)60493-6).

The month before, an H5N1 patient in Shenzhen also recovered after receiving plasma from someone who had survived the infection, suggesting that antibodies from such survivors are a promising approach to treating H5N1, and should be investigated further.

However, poultry in Chinese markets are required to be vaccinated, and the fact that the Nanjing salesman had visited a live poultry market shortly before he fell ill reinforces fears that many Chinese could be getting H5N1 from vaccinated poultry, which carry the virus but remain healthy. Like the salesman, such people could be misdiagnosed because they have not been near sick birds.

Jeremy Farrar of the University of Oxford's Clinical Research Unit in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, says scientists should study family clusters of H5N1 to learn what allows the virus to infect humans. Clusters in Thailand, Indonesia, Pakistan and possibly Vietnam have involved only genetically related people. Generally, the virus remains hard to catch - none of other 91 people who'd had contact with the salesman or his father were infected.
 

Exodia

The Forbidden One
Bird flu kills another woman in Egypt, bringing death toll in country to 22​

The Associated PressPublished: April 11, 2008

CAIRO, Egypt: An Egyptian health ministry official has announced the death of a 30-year-old woman of bird flu, raising the country's deaths to 22.

The official said the woman contracted the H5N1 virus from domestic fowl. She was identified as Walaa Ahmad Abdel-Jalil from the Matariya district in the northern Nile Delta region. She was hospitalized Wednesday with high fever and breathing difficulties and treated with Tamiflu, a drug commonly used for the disease, but died despite treatment.

The health official was not identified by name, but his statement was carried Friday by the state MENA news agency. This is Egypt's 49th case of bird flu in humans since March 2006 when the disease broke out.

Egypt has the highest number of cases in humans after Indonesia and Vietnam.

http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2008/04/11/africa/ME-GEN-Egypt-Bird-Flu.php
 

JPD

Inactive
China rejects human-to-human bird flu report

http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080412/wl_asia_afp/healthfluchina

BEIJING (AFP) - China has rejected a study which found a probable case of human-to-human bird flu transmission in the country, state media reported.
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The study, published in British medical magazine The Lancet this week, said a 24-year-old man was likely to have infected his father with H5N1 before dying, raising the spectre of a feared flu pandemic.

But health ministry spokesman Mao Qun'an said there was no clear evidence to support the findings.

"So far no evidence has been found in China to support the idea that the H5N1 virus can easily pass from one person to another," he said, according to Xinhua news agency on Friday.

The case, in the eastern city of Nanjing in December, is one of a handful worldwide in which the H5N1 virus is suspected to have spread from one person to another.

To date, however, all such cases have been what scientists call "limited, non-sustained, person-to-person transmission," meaning that contagion only occurs under specific circumstances.

The vast majority of the known 378 human cases of H5N1 bird flu since 2003 were spread by domestic or wild fowl, according to the World Health Organisation. More than 60 percent proved fatal.

Experts fear that the H5N1 virus could mutate after infecting one human into a more contagious form, as occurred during at least three flu pandemics in the 20th century.

An estimated 20 to 40 million people perished in the so-called "Spanish flu" of 1918. Since 2003, there have been around 200 bird flu fatalities, mainly in Asia.
 

JPD

Inactive
Russia ministry confirms bird flu outbreak

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/..._bird_flu_outbreak/rssarticleshow/2946293.cms

MOSCOW: Russia's agriculture ministry confirmed a bird flu outbreak in a village in the Far East region of Primorye which was quarantined after scores of chickens died.

"In two days, 28 out of 42 hens and guinea fowl died on a farm" in the village of Vozdvizhenka, 110 kilometres north of Vladivostok, the ministry's veterinary control unit said in a statement on Thursday.

The dead birds had been incinerated, it added. A regional laboratory made the discovery after testing samples taken from sick birds, and a national laboratory was due to determine if it was the deadly H5N1 strain of the virus.

Authorities cordoned off the village, killed all other fowl on the farm and vaccinated birds in the village and nearby areas, the ministry said.

The H5N1 strain of bird flu has killed more than 230 people worldwide since late 2003.

Experts fear the virus, which can be spread from birds to humans, could mutate into a form easily transmissible between people and spark a deadly global pandemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
More H5N1 Receptor Binding Domain Changes

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04120801/H5N1_RBD_3.html

Recombinomics Commentary 13:35
April 12, 2008

The triple N158S/Q226L/N248D HA mutation (which eliminates a glycosylation site at position 158) caused a switch from avian to human receptor specificity.

The above comments from a recent paper describe a new combination of changes that affect receptor binding specificity in clade 1 H5N1. These data acknowledge that various combinations in H5N1 can affect this specificity and raise additional concerns that the rapid change of H5N1 can lead to the acquisition and fixing of these changes and lead to more efficient transmission of H5N1 to humans.

Clade 1 isolates have tandem glycosylation sites at positions 157 and 158. However, the vast majority of clade 2.2 isolates have eliminated both of these sites reducing the number of required receptor binding changes from 3 to 2. However, different clades may use different combinations to change specificties, so the absence of glycosylation at both positions may create additional combinations.

Clade 2.2 outbreaks have already produced clusters of cases in the Middle East. The first reported clade 2.2 human infection involved S227N, which is adjacent to Q226L described in the paper. Although this predicted change was not found in an isolate from the sister of the index case, the change was found in other human isolate from Turkey. In Turkey there were 21 lab confirmed cases, but only 12 of the 21 were confirmed in England, and sequences from only four of the 12 have been published. Thus, 2 of the 4 human H5N1 sequences from Turkey have S227N. Almost all 21 lab confirmed cases in Turkey were from clusters, suggesting the S227N was widespread, but degradation of samples limited confirmation and isolation of the H5N1 from that 2006 outbreak. S227N was also found in one of the Egyptian isolates in 2006 as well as 2007.

In addition to changes at position 227, other receptor binding domain changes have been found in patients from Egypt. The Gharbiya cluster, in late 2006, lead to the isolation of H5N1 from two patients. Both had V223I and M230I. These changes bracket the change described at position 226. Although human sequences have not been released for this season, poultry isolates have both V223I and M230I. Last season all human isolates with M230I were from fatal cases. In addition, isolates from vaccinated flocks in Egypt have another receptor binding domain change, M230V.

In addition to the receptor binding domain changes in Egypt and Turkey, additional changes have been reported in human H5N1 from Iraq. In Iraq the human H5N1 isolates had two receptor binding domain changes, N186S and Q196R, while human isolates from Azerbaijan had one change, N186K. The isolates from Iraq and Azerbaijan, like the isolates from Turkey and Egypt were from clusters which represented more efficient transmission to humans and/or human to human transmission.

In addition to the elimination of the glycosylation site at position 158, clade 2.2 isolates have PB1 E627K, which increases polymerase activity at 33 C, the temperature of a human nose or throat in the winter. Moreover, M230I is present in seasonal flu (H1N1, H3N2 , influenza B) signaling selective advantage for growth in humans.

Thus, the latest paper describes an additional path to the conversion of H5N1 from an avian to a human specificity, raising concerns of additional combinations of changes that create an altered binding specificity, which when combined with changes described above, are cause for concern.
 

JPD

Inactive
South Korea confirms latest deadly bird flu strain

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20080413/hl_nm/birdflu_korea_dc

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea on Sunday confirmed its latest case of bird flu as from the deadly H5N1 strain, adding to a string of outbreaks in recent weeks which led to the culling of more than half a million poultry.
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The latest confirmation was in the county of Yeongam in South Jeolla province, 320 km (198.8 miles) south of Seoul and about 100 km from the area in a neighboring province where the first outbreak since a year ago was reported on April 3.

Culling of poultry at about 20 farms in the region is already complete while quarantine officials continue tests on other suspected cases, the South Jeolla provincial livestock office said in a statement.

Farm officials have stopped the shipment of millions of birds from the two southern provinces and ordered the destruction of eggs distributed from the area.

South Korea had seven outbreaks of the deadly H5N1 strain between November 2006 and March 2007 and spent 58 billion won ($59.5 million) on quarantine measures.

There had been 238 human deaths globally from the H5N1 strain and 376 confirmed cases of infection since 2003 according to World Health Organization data. An Egyptian woman has been reported dead since those figures were available.

A major concern is the possibility of mutation into a disease that easily passes from one person to another, triggering a global pandemic.
 

JPD

Inactive
H5N1 Migration in South Korea

http://www.recombinomics.com/News/04130801/H5N1_ROK_Migration.html

Recombinomics Commentary 07:95
April 13, 2008

There were two prior HPAI outbreaks in the ROK as a result of infected migratory birds. These outbreaks occurred in poultry farms 15 Dec 03 to 5 Feb 04, and then again 22 Nov 06 to 8 Mar 07.

The above comments from the US Forces in Korea are a refreshing change in the description of the H5N1 outbreaks in South Korea (and elsewhere). The report includes maps of the above outbreaks and the above description leaves little doubt that the poultry outbreaks are due to migratory birds.

The role of migratory birds in the transport and transmission of high pathogenic H5N1 was settled in the summer of 2005, but media reports, as well as reports from Promed and some blogs continue to misinform the general public on this issue by suggesting that there is a scientific debate on this issue. These news outlets are supported by similar misinformation from conservation and bird watching groups, which continue to create confusion on this very straightforward and obvious method of H5N1 distribution.

In South Korea the two earlier outbreaks corresponded to wild bird migration. The 2003/2004 outbreak signaled the start of a major geographic expansion of H5n1 out of China. Japan also reported H5N1 outbreaks and subsequently published sequences from wild resident birds, which were closely related to the sequences in South Korea.

However, the major signal for long range migratory bird transport and transmission of H5N1 happened in the spring of 2005 when a massive outbreak was reported at Qinghai Lake in central China. Initially all dead birds were bar-headed geese, which can fly 1000 miles in 24 hours. The OIE reported listed 5 long range migratory bird species, but the large number of species that visit the nature reserve in the spring suggested that the number of infected species was much greater.

Sequences published in Nature and Science in July, 2005 showed that the species was novel, but related to the H5N1 from South Korea and Japan in 2003/2004. This sequence data alone suggested that distribution by long range migratory birds had been ongoing, but at a level that was not detectable or reportable, because no country west of China had reported H5N1.

In mid-July however, H5N1 was reported at Chany Lake in southern Siberia. The OIE report attributed the outbreak to wild birds and noted that the first farms to be affected were those that shared small lakes with wild birds. The reports also included sequence data showing that the H5N1 in Russia was also the Qinghai strain. Thus, by the summer of 2007 there was little doubt that migratory birds could transport and transmit H5N1 over long distances, since the location in Siberia was thousands of miles from Qinghai Lake. Moreover, H5N1 was isolated from a healthy crested grebe, and that H5N1 was also the Qinghai strain.

The final blow came in August of 2005, when wild birds began dying at Erhel Lake in Mongolia. The location of the remote lake relative to outbreaks in China and Russia, as well as the lack of poultry farms in the area once again provided compelling evidence that H5N1 was transported thousands of miles by migratory birds and was transmitted to hosts in an around nature reserves, which attracted dozens of species of waterfowl.

Conservation groups help out with the Mongolia outbreak. Although they initially did not believe the dead birds were linked to H5N1 because the number of dead birds was markedly lower than Qinghai Lake. However, the birds were H5N1 positive and the sequences were Qinghai. However these groups the predicted that H5N1 would not spread because the fecal samples from live birds in the area tested negative for H5N1. However, since H5N1 had clearly flown into the region in live birds, the failure to detect H5N1 in any live birds signal a fatally flawed assay that lacked the sensitivity required for the detection of H5n1 in the healthy birds.

The summer of 2005 signaled the launch of a major propaganda campaign centered on “dead birds don’t fly” and “wild birds as victims”. This campaign included reports published by Promed as well as significant e-mail and internet campaigns. These reports largely depended on the fatally flawed assay of live wild birds to support the two major themes. The reports ignored the sequence data, the failure to detect H5N1 in live birds where there were large numbers of H5N1 positive dead birds, and the (limited) detection of H5N1 by others in healthy wild birds.

The outbreaks in Mongolia and Siberia in the summer were followed by outbreaks in 50 countries in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Prior H5N1 outbreaks had not been reported in any of these countries previously, and all outbreaks post-Qinghai Lake were the Qinghai strain.

The following year, the cycle was repeated. H5N1 was again found in Qinghai Province in the spring of 2006, and Qinghai H5N1 was found at a massive wild bird outbreak at Uvs Lake in the summer of 2006 in northern Mongolia and southern Siberia. The H5N1 at Uvs Lake was still clade 2.2, but had a few changes that distinguished the Uvs Lake isolates from earlier clade 2.2.3 isolates.

In the fall of 2006 the Uvs Lake strain was then found in South Korea along a migratory bird flyway that passed through southwestern Korea. The H5N1 was identified in dead poultry as well as feces collected at locations frequented by migratory birds. Although the Uvs Lake strain was not reported in Europe or the Middle East in the fall, it was identified in an outbreak in Kuwait in February, 2007.

The limited detection in the fall or spring of 2007 in Europe led to the pronouncement at the Options VI meeting in Toronto in June, 2007 that H5N1 in wild birds in Europe had been eliminated, based on the false negatives generated by conservation groups collecting fecal samples in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. However, within minutes of the talk the Czech Republic reported an H5N1 poultry outbreak, which was quickly followed by wild bird outbreaks in the Czech Republic, Germany, and France. These summer outbreaks indicated H5N1 was endemic in wild birds in the region, but was largely undetected. All of these summer outbreaks were due to the Uvs Lake strain of H5N1, but each outbreak had regional differences indicating these outbreaks were due to independent introductions by wild birds.

In the fall, there were outbreaks throughout central and western Europe, and all reported outbreaks were the Uvs Lake strain of H5N1. Multiple sequences from these outbreaks demonstrated near identity, as indicated by a single introductions, These data also supported multiple introductions in outbreaks involving distinct differences, such as the mute swans and Canadian goose in southern. Thus, the overwhelming majority of outbreaks west of China have been due to migratory or resident wild birds. The exception that proves the rule was the outbreak in England in early 2007, which linked that outbreak to the same company with operations in Hungary.

Thus, the current outbreak in South Korea completes a long string of H5N1 outbreaks of clade 2.2 or clade 2.2 precursor sequences, that have been ongoing for more than fours years. These outbreaks involve H5N1 that is transported and transmitted by migratory birds.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird flu virus may have mutated

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/HealthSci/Bird_flu_virus_may_have_mutated/articleshow/2948266.cms

NEW DELHI: The highly pathogenic H5N1 bird flu virus has passed from human-to-human in China, raising fears that the virus may have started to mutate. In a highly rare case, genetic tests on a 52-year-old father diagnosed with bird flu in the Jiangsu province of China has shown that he was infected by H5N1 from his 24-year-old dying son.

Both members of the family were diagnosed with avian influenza infection within a week of each other in December 2007. However, scientists from China's Centre for Disease Control and Prevention who said that the father got infected while caring for his son in the hospital reported in the 'Lancet' on Tuesday that the transmission was "limited and non-sustained", allaying fears that the virus is evolving fast to pass easily from human-to-human to cause the next big influenza pandemic.

Experts predict that around 20% of the total world population will fall ill during the next pandemic and 28 million may need hospital care.

To be doubly sure against a sustained transmission, China has tested 91 people the two men had come into close contact with. None of these people have been found to be infected.

Speaking to TOI from New York, Dr David Nabarro, one of the world's best known influenza scientists and the UN coordinator for avian and human influenza, said, "Such instances of sporadic human-human transmission are expected and are reminders that we should maintain maximum amount of vigilance. We can't predict when and where the virus will mutate to cause the next big pandemic. However, what's relieving is that the virus did not show sustained infection."

According to Prof Angus Nicoll, influenza coordinator at the European Centre for Disease Control and Prevention, the first such human-to-human transmission was recorded in Hong Kong in 1997 when a nurse got infected from a patient.

He told TOI from Sweden, "Such transmission is rare. There is also no evidence that the virus has changed behaviour to easily shift from human to human according to the Chinese scientists, that could cause a chain of infections. But countries must maintain a good surveillance system to track and identify human cases rapidly."

Dr Paul Gully, senior advisor on avian influenza at WHO, added from Geneva, "No further transmission from the father or the son seems to have happened. However, such transmissions have occurred in Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam. Those residing in Jiangsu province should be under close watch to identify if a next generation of transmission has happened or not for certain."

So far, 376 cases of human infection with the H5N1 form of bird flu have been recorded in 14 countries since November 2003, mostly in South-East Asia.
 

JPD

Inactive
Bird Flu Spreads; Takes New Pattern

http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/04/117_22474.html

By Bae Ji-sook
Staff Reporter

Avian influenza is spreading in an unusual pattern, arousing fears over the possibility of the virus changing into one that infects humans and later becomes transferable directly from human to human.

Experts studying several outbreaks of the bird flu since first reported on April 2 said this time, the outbreak has seen very different patterns from before.

According to governmental reports, the flu appeared to be spread in cold weather by migratory birds visiting Korea during the period. The suitable environment for the virus to infect poultry, especially chickens, was mainly November through to March when temperatures were below 4 degrees Celsius, they said.

However, the initial outbreak this year occurred in April, which means the highly contagious flu had appeared in warmer days with summer time approaching.

The infection of ducks at farms in Gimje, North Jeolla Province, also showed that the disease is now contagious to other poultry.

The virus is spreading faster than expected. It was first confirmed in Gimje on April 2, but within two weeks, it has already been confirmed on six other farms nearby and even in the South Jeolla area. On Monday, several other suspected bird flu cases were reported at Iksan and Hampyeong, North of Jeolla Province. The authorities confirmed a total of 15 cases of bird flu as of Monday.

Officials from the Ministry of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries also admitted that the disease is quite different from previous patterns in 2002-2003 and 2006-2007. The fact that the exact route of infection is not identified added public fear toward the disease that has caused the government to kill millions of chickens and thousands of ducks.

Prof. Kim Woo-ju of Korea University Medical Center told Hankook Ilbo newspaper that the virus could easily turn into a pandemic influenza and that the government should set appropriate measures to deal with it.

``By far, avian flu has been found in 67 countries worldwide, where 379 people from 14 countries were reported infected. Among them, 239, or 63 percent, have died,'' he said.

However, the government, which has been criticized for not taking strong measures toward active prevention of outbreaks assured people that the warm weather would kill off the virus, denouncing Kim's suggestion.

``We need at least six months to identify where the virus came from and how it has affected other people. But by far we have confirmed H5N1 virus only, which is carried by migratory birds from the northern part of the globe,'' a ministry spokesman said.

The ministry will announce its interim report on the highly contagious disease Wednesday or Thursday.
 

JPD

Inactive
Indonesia to launch bird flu pandemic plan

http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest+News/Asia/STIStory_227139.html

JAKARTA - INDONESIA, which has the highest death toll from bird flu of any country, will launch a plan later this week to deal with a possible influenza pandemic, officials said on Monday.

Mr Heru Setijanto, head of surveillance and monitoring at the national commission for bird flu control, said the plan would be followed up a week later by a three-day pandemic simulation involving several villages on the resort island of Bali.

In the case of a pandemic, an estimated 5 million Indonesians could be infected with the virus, he said, adding that of those infected, between 5 and 10 per cent would die.

'In such a situation, hundreds of thousands would die,' Mr Setijanto said, 'and hospitals would be not able to accommodate all patients'.

Indonesia has had 132 confirmed cases of bird flu, 107 of them fatal. He declined to give details about what measures would be taken in the event of a pandemic.

'The current situation is already very worrying,' he said, speaking on the sidelines of a bird flu conference.

The official also said researchers were looking into the role of migratory birds in transmitting bird flu.

'There are indications that there have been cases of transmission from migratory birds but the strains are low pathogenic,' he said.

Contact with sick fowl is the most common way of contracting the H5N1 virus, which is endemic in bird populations in most of Indonesia.

Experts say the danger is that the virus may evolve into a form that people can easily catch and pass to one another, in which case the transmission rate would soar, causing a pandemic in which millions of people could die worldwide.

The national bird flu commission said the virus had infected poultry in 31 out of 33 provinces in Indonesia. It said five provinces had not reported new cases in the past six months. -- REUTERS
 
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